[1]Jeanne Guyon, Autobiography of Madame Guyon, chapter 5.
[2] Autobiography, chapter 5.
[3] Autobiography, chapter 8.
[4] This refers to a state where the memory and understanding are absorbed by and united with the will so that they become wholly subject to it, instead of independenty pursing their own devices.
[5] Autobiography, chapter 8.
[6] "Recollection is the chief means whereby we attain to a conquest of the senses. It detaches and separates us from them, and sweetly saps the very cause from whence they derive their influence over us." Autobiography, chapter 11.
[7] Autobiography, chapter 11.
[8] A.W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God, pp. 45-47.
[9] Jeanne Guyon, Union with God, p. 54.
[10] Autobiography, chapter 27.
[11] The New Catholics were converts to Catholocism made among the Protestants in Geneva.